Virtual Politics
Identity and Community in Cyberspace
Edited by:
- David Holmes - Monash University, Australia
Courses:
Political Sociology
Political Sociology
February 1998 | 256 pages | SAGE Publications Ltd
Virtual Politics is a critical overview of the newùdigitalùbody politic, with new technologies framing the discussion of key themes in social theory. This book shows how these new technologies are altering the nature of identity and agency, the relation of self to other, and the structure of community and political representation.
The principal theme of Virtual Politics is that electronically and digitally simulated environments offer an important metaphor for understanding social relations. This volume focuses on how virtual realities effectively extend space, time, and the body, showing how technologies such as the automobile and environments such as the movie theater and the shopping mall prefigure cyberspace. It also examines the loss of political identity and agency in cyberspace and identifies a disembodied consumer in anonymous control of a simulated reality.
Virtual Politics will be required reading for students of sociology, social theory, and cultural studies.
Introduction
PART ONE: THE SELF, IDENTITY AND BODY IN THE AGE OF THE VIRTUAL
David Holmes
Virtual Identity
Cathryn Vasseleu
Virtual Worlds/Virtual Bodies
Nicola Green
Beyond Being Digital
Chris Chesher
An Ontology of Digital Domains
Simon Cooper
The Subject of Virtual Reality
Paul James and Freya Carkeek
This Abstract Body
PART TWO: POLITICS AND COMMUNITY IN VIRTUAL WORLDS
Michael Ostwald
Michele Willson
Community in the Abstract
Mark Nunes
What Space Is Cyberspace?
Patricia Wise
Always Already Virtual
Chris Zigiuras
Virtual Reality and the New Age
Mark Poster
Cyberdemocracy
`Contains valuable insights for scholars teaching and researching in this field' - Political Science